A Parting Blessing (Jeremiah Ingalls): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 03:42, 9 June 2019
Music files
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- Editor: Barry Johnston (submitted 2017-10-19). Score information: 7 x 10 inches (landscape), 1 page, 50 kB Copyright: Public Domain
- Edition notes: Four-part version; Counter part by B. C. Johnston, 2017. Note shapes added (4-shape). All four stanzas included. MusicXML source file(s) in compressed .mxl format.
- Editor: Barry Johnston (submitted 2017-10-19). Score information: Letter, 1 page, 68 kB Copyright: Public Domain
- Edition notes: Three-part version. Oval note edition, as written in 1805. All three stanzas included. MusicXML source file(s) in compressed .mxl format.
- Editor: Barry Johnston (submitted 2017-10-19). Score information: 7 x 10 inches (landscape), 1 page, 48 kB Copyright: Public Domain
- Edition notes: Three-part version. Note shapes added (4-shape). All three stanzas included.
General Information
Title: A Parting Blessing
First Line: Jesus, grant us all a blessing
Composer: Amos Pilsbury
Arranger: Jeremiah Ingalls
Lyricist: Anonymous
Number of voices: 3vv Voicing: STB
Genre: Sacred Meter: 87. 87. 87
Language: English
Instruments: A cappella
{{Published}} is obsolete (code commented out), replaced with {{Pub}} for works and {{PubDatePlace}} for publications.
Description: Tune composed by Amos Pilsbury in 1799, as Kingston. Arranged by Ingalls in 1805 for three voices. A folk hymn (Jackson 1953b, no. 346). See David Music (1995) for a discussion of the history of this tune. Words by an anonymous author, first published 1793, sometimes attributed to George Askins (died 1816), unlikely since he emigated to the United States in 1801 (Richard Hulan, in Steel and Hulan 2010). Most often (as in Ingalls 1805) it appears with three stanzas.
External websites:
Original text and translations
English text 1. Jesus, grant us all a blessing, |
2. Jesus, pardon all our follies, |
3. May thy blessing, Lord, go with us |